https://www.google.com/maps/place/Jason+Jacques+Gallery/@40.7465935,-74.0067876,15z/data=!4m5!3m4!1s0x0:0xa1601bbca9445ff8!8m2!3d40.7465935!4d-74.0067876

Press Release

Jason Jacques Gallery is pleased to invite you to the fourth edition of FOG Design+Art. This international event brings together leading galleries and contributors to the worlds of design and visual arts. Jason Jacques Gallery is one of forty-five galleries and art dealers taking part in this year’s much-anticipated edition.

Our booth will feature an eclectic combination of important works by twentieth-century and contemporary ceramists, designers, and photographers. 

A small number of Art Nouveau decorative pieces, which include a monumental vase by the Amphora manufacture, and furniture by Pierre Ansart and Johann Borgersen, will be presented.

Photography will also be a major component of the exhibition, with orbiter photographs of the Moon taken by NASA in the 1960s, as well as a group of ten photographs by Daidō Moriyama, an award-winning Japanese artist who worked in the post-war period.

As for paintings, we will be showing an early, geometric work by Josef Albers painted in 1936 owned by Walter Gropius, a portrait of Allen Ginsberg by Francesco Clemente, as well as a lovely mid-1970s Willem de Kooning.

Contemporary works will include a wide-ranging selection of colorful vessels by Danish ceramist Morten Løbner Espersen, as well as trompe-l’oeil stoneware ceramics by Eric Serrtella, and sculptures from Kim Simonsson’s Moss People series. Four benches by American designer Rick Owens will also be presented.

The ensemble of objects exhibited at FOG Design+Art, which vary in media, time, and place, reflects the scope of Jason Jacques Gallery’s collection and the gallery’s commitment to presenting exciting and valuable works of art and design from the 19th to the 21st century.

FOG Design+Art
January 12 - 15, 2017

Fort Mason Festival Pavilion
San Francisco, CA

Booth 211


For more information, contact the gallery at info@jasonjacques.com.

Back To Top